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GENEYIEVE, 



AND OTHER POEMS. 



GENEVIEVE, 



AND OTHER POEMS. 



ANDREW JAMES SYMINGTON. 



(PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION.) 
NOT PUBLISHED. 

1855. 



c\ 






J. AND R. PARLAXE, PRINTERS 



205449 
'13 



THE WRITER 

OP THESE STRAY VEBSES, 

SCfectionatdg tngcn&es tfyzm to Ins $xitnb, 
MAEY HOWITT, 

" NOT FOR THEIR RHYME," 
BUT AS 

A SINCERE THOUGH UNWORTHY EXPRESSION 

Of &egart> 

DURING MANY CHANGEFUL YEARS. 



Christmas, 1855. 



CONTENTS. 



genevieve,* ......... 1 

psyche; an emblem, 17 

nature's voices, . . . ■ 19 

song for music, 22 

love's wrong, .23 

impromptu, from a student's diary, . . . . 25 

dramatic song, 29 

emmeline, . . . - . . . . . . . . 31 

FRAGMENT, 3-i 

PRIMROSES 35 



*Note, — To make this Ballad — "belonging as it does to an earlier forma- 
tion — accord "with our present views, -would be entirely to re-write it, and 
at best be like putting new wine into old bottles ; a task for which we — now 
engaged in other and more important studies — have neither time nor 
inclination. With the exception, therefore, of a few verbal alterations, 
the production of one who had then just entered upon his teens is allowed 
to retain its original form. The same remark is also partly applicable to 
a few other poems in this volume. 



VI 11 



CONTENTS. 



Page 
love's heaven, .36 

dramatic song, . . . 37 

to undine, 39 

SONG, 41 

LINES, . . .42 

TO ALICE, 44 

THE VOICE OF THE SEA. . . . . . . .46 

SONG OF LIFE, ... 48 

SONG FOR MUSIC, 50 

THE DREAM HARP, 52 

LIFE'S DREAM, ........ 57 

ASPIRATION AND DUTY, 60 



GENEVIEVE. 

A TALE OF THE OLDEN TIME. 

— — 

PART I. 

All brightly slione the clear full moon 

Upon the sea that eve, 
When wandered forth the saintlike form 

Of lovely Genevieve. 

The silvery wavelets, rippling in 

Upon the pebbly shore, 
Seemed, one by one, to kiss her feet, 

Then die for evermore. 



GENEVIEVE. 



A ruined castle, high above, 
Stood on the craggy steep; 

It's shadow, sleeping far beneath, 
Lay mirror'd on the deep. 

In loneliness, she wandered on, 
With downcast weeping eye; 

No thing of life seemed else abroad, 
Save wild birds sailing by. 

She gazed into the clear blue vault — 
No speck or cloud saw she; 

The vesper star beamed softly down, 
And glimmered on the sea; 

The only star in all the heavens, 
Its lustre burned bright — 

But soon it dimmed and paled away 
Before the Queen of Night. 



GENEVIEVE. 

A pearly tear stood in her eye — 
(Oh, why do angels weep!) 

It quivered in the moon's wan light, 
Then rolled adown her cheek: 

And well the lovely maid might grieve 

O'er joys now fled away; 
She was, upon a time, I ween, 

The gayest of the gay: 

Her mother's darling only child- — 
Her mother now was dead, — 

The Baron soon hath dried his tears, 
And other lady wed. 

Fair Genevieve felt all the change, 
Slowly the years rolled on; 

Alas, to soothe her weary heart, 
In Snowdown Hall were none! 



GENEVIEVE. 

Xo voice, in all the world, save one. 
Was music to her ear; — 

A gallant Knight was Linton brave. 
Her own true-love so dear, 

Each prize at joist or tournament 

Aye falling to his hand; 
But now — he fought the Saracen , 

Far in the Holy Land. 

Thus alien in a dreary home, 
Long pined this gentle dove, 

Oft praying for the safe return 
Of her own faithful love. 



GENEVIEVE. 



PART II. 

Unlookecl for, suddenly there came 

A fierce marauding band, 
Who, with the rushing torrent's might. 

Laid waste the Baron's land, 

And razed the castle to the ground, 

Upon that woeful eve, — 
Xo one of five- arid-forty souls 

Escaped, save Genevieve 



Who, springing on her milk-white steed, 
Leapt o'er the moat and fled; 

A shower of arrows scathlessly 
Thick falling round her head. 



GENEVIEVE. 

Half frantic ? yielding up the rein, 
Away with wild hot speed, 

On, flew the gentle lady fair, 
Upon her matchless steed : 

Away, careering like the wind, 

With precious load it flew, 
Till danger seemed all left behind, 

The gallant barb so true* 

Then panting hard, it fell and died 

Beneath a spreading tree ; 
Alas, I ween, the lady's grief 

Was pitiful to see 1 

Thus, left all lonely in the wood, 
When fell the shades of night, 

She started — seeing through the leaves 
A strange pale glimmering light. 



GENEVIEVE. 

Then lo! a warrior strange and fierce 

Came swiftly o'er the plain, 
Y-elad in "bright and glittering mail — 

The lady hid in vain: 

For high across his saddle-bow, 

Fair Genevieve he swung; 
She shrieked — he answered ne'er a word. 
But onwards with her sprung. 

The maiden's cry had reached the ear 

Of young and gallant knight, 
Who, spurring onwards, now appeared. 

In shinino- armour client. 

He shouted — and the wild woods ran°:— 
•'This lance the maid shall free." 

Grim Hugo turned him round and scowled. 
But ne'er a word spake he. 



GENEVIEVE. 

In terror great the lady swooned, 

And, Hugo in the shade 
Alighting, laid her on the turf,— 

The young knight drew his blade. 

But Hugo soon regains his steed — 

To combat fierce they prance, 
Prepared for onset furious, 

They charge, with levelled lance: 

And now the good steel of the Knight, 

That glittered keen and cold, 
Ran, warm and red, right through the heart 

Of Hugo grim and bold. 

The maiden woke and found the Knight 

Sore wounded by the strife ; 
She laved his pale brow r in the stream — 

Ah ! quickly ebbed the life ! 



GENEVIEVE. 

His glazing eye now dimly moved, 
Then faintly whispered he, 

"Adieu! God fend thee! gentle maid, 
Farewell, bright chivalry I" 



PART III. 

Left desolate, fair Genevieve 
Now wandered far and near, 

That tidings, from the Holy Land, 
Of Linton, she might hear : 

Lamenting ever, from her heart, 
The gallant stranger Knight, 

Who shed his blood, and freed her from 
Grim Hugo, that dread night. 



10 GXEVIEVE. 

Her breaking heart, distraught, lone, drear, 
Hope scarcely shed one beam, — 

To her, thus wandering through the wood, 
Life seemed a feverish dream. 

Now faint and weary, Genevieve 

Fled to a rocky cave, 
And weeping, there she fell asleep, 

Lulled by the sighing wave. 

The rosy morn, all beautiful, 

In amber robes was dight — 
The sun now glowed with radiance, 

Diffusing golden light. 

Forth from the cave came Genevieve, 
And every thing looked gay; 

It only made her heart more sad, — 
Her thoughts were far away. 



GENEVIEVE. 11 

Thus wandering forth to seek her love. 

Through many a tangled wild. 
So sadly beautiful, she seemed 

A lovely angel-child. 

Till eve she held her weary way — 
When in a lonely dell, 

heard, sweet floating through the air, 
The tones of chapel bell : 

And following the Vesper call, 
The shrine at length she found, — - 

Music rolling in surging waves, 
And incense floating 'round, 

The antique aisle, with traceries 

Of quaint device, adorned, 
Showed angels, bending over tombs, 

W no there for ever mourned. 



12 GENEVIEVE. 

Weary and sad, fair Genevieve 
Had reached the chapel old; 

Now, lowly kneeling, there she prayed, 
Upon the marble cold. 



PART IV. 



That clay, young Linton, from afar, 

Eeturned to liberty; 
For captive, on a foreign strand, 

In dungeon long lay he. 

In breathless haste he flew to meet 
His own dear Genevieve, — 

Deserted ruins only there, 
Oh wildly did he grieve ! 



GENEVIEVE. 

Then ranging far to seek his love. 

He reached the chapel old; 
Exhausted, there he entered in 

As evening Vespers tolled. 

When nothing of his Genevieve 

The monks to him could tell; 
He asked them of his bosom friend. 

Young Frank of Bock Castelle. 

The monks they've told their weary guest. 
How Frank the brave in fight, 

But three days landed, spilt his blood, 
And freed a lady bright. 

u Ah, woe is ine! J? young Linton said, 
"That strikes me like a knell — ■ 

Both lost — my Love, and my true Friend, 
Brave Frank of Kock Castelle!" 



14 GENEVIEVE. 

With downcast eye, right sorrowful, 

He leant upon his spear, 
Till startled by an aged priest, 

Who cried, u a vision here! ?; 

They looked into the sacristy, 

And lo ! like angel bright, 
They saw a lovely kneeling thing. 

In sheen of damask light ! 

Warm, through the stained window, fell 

The soft rich light of eve ; 
Her glowing garb, a tissue seemed. 

Such as the fairies weave ; 

While, silently, they gazed on her, 
In wonder strange, and fear — 

A secret power, young Linton felt, 
That urged him to draw near. 



GENEVIEVE. 15 

With eyes upturned, she saw him not, 

Bathed in the light of eve; — 
He touched her scarce — the spell was broke — - 

It was his Genevieve ! 

Overwhelmed with the sudden joy, 

He clasped her to his heart, 
And fondly, by his sword, he swore, 

From her he ne'er would part. 

Meanwhile with clanking steps they heard 

A foot in the Chapelle, 
And lo! each eye in wonder saw 

Young Frank of Eock Castelle. 

He, counted slain, by all around, 

Woke from a death-like trance, 
And skillful leech had healed the wound 

Where pierced the barbed lance, 



1 6 GENEVIEVE. 

Now — ne'er, in all the wide wide world, 
Were seen a happier three, — 

They wept for joy, and kissed for love, 
And all went merrily. 

In that same hour — on that same spot, 
Brave Linton wed his love; 

The aged priest, down on their heads, 
Prayed blessings from above. 

Full merry was the banqueting 

Upon that joyous night; 
Well might the largess Linton gave 

Be thought on with delight. 

Next morn he mounted his proud steed, 
And she a light palfrey, — 

Two hearts made one, in happy glee, 
They swiftly rode away! 

1839. 



PSYCHE. 



AN EMBLEM. 



Methought, I chased a bright blue Butterfly, 

Because I loved it. I would not have harmed, 

Or brushed the dust from off its wings — yet still 

It flew, and lured me on, from flower to flower, 

From field to field, by coppice, rock, and stream, 

Till, on the brink of a huge precipice, 

In utter loneliness, and silent woe, 

I stood arrested — saw it float away — 

And my heart sunk within me! — (Bitter tears. 

Why will ye come unbicl, at memory 

Of sadness which has long since passed away!) 



18 PSYCHE. 

As newly prisoned bird, with fluttering wing, 
Dashes itself against the cruel wires, 
On hearing its mate sing in sunny fields, 
My soul would fain have quit its house of clay, 
To follow, and behold for evermore, 
That love- winged living thing, so passing fair. 

Ere it was lost to view, in agony 
My spirit cried to God, heaving with thought 
Unutterable. 

He heard — and forthwith, wings 
Enabled me in wonderment to soar, 
Companioning the bright winged Butterfly, 
Away into the realms of azure light ! 



NATUBE'S VOICES. 



The drowsy lium of summer bee, 
The distant murmur of the sea, 
Or wind-waked forest minstrelsy, — 

Sounds, vague yet deep, find sympathies 
In listening souls; then oft arise 
Presentiments like memories; 

And thoughts, that wander through the Past, 
Beyond the reach of words, crowd fast, 
Whose Present is — Time, first to last. 



20 nature's voices. 

When, through the quivering blue of night, 
The stars of heaven shed peaceful light, 
Man's spirit seeks the Infinite : 

Or when the full moon floods the sea 

With living glory; or when she 

Touches with bronze, tower, rock, or tree, — - 

Then Nature's voices reach the soul — 
Her mysteries an open scroll — 
We feel related to the whole ! 

Spelled by the music of the spheres, 
Whose strains are bars of myriad years, 
Unheard by "gross unpurged ears:" 

Arrested by dim questionings, 

Man cannot pierce the husk of things, 

Till Faith her clearer vision brings : 



nature's voices. 21 

The symbol then is understood, 

As He intended that it should, 

Who once pronounced all "very good;" 

Instinct with meaning, star, or flower, 
Wind, wave, all creatures, hour by hour 
Proclaiming — Wisdom, Goodness, Power! 



SONG FOE MUSIC. 



Sweet, as the music of angel-harps 
Ethereally wild and rare, 
Wafted from far 
Beyond eve's star, 
And winnowing the crimson air, 
Is the voice of my true love, 
My lamb, my dove, 
When she breathes, "I love thee!" 



LOVE'S WEONG. 



A DRAMATIC FRAGMENT. 



She says she loved, and loves me yet, 
But she's been false to me, 
As false as false can be ; 

I saw her wrong me grievously, 
Oh, how can I forget ! 

She, thinking not I know her guilt, 

Asserteth innocence ; 

(Ah, worse than vain defence!) 
What will restore lost confidence? 
Say can love be rebuilt? 



24 love's wrong. 

Poor erring child, her eyes are wet 
With thoughts of other years — 
I know the worst she fears r 

Ah, were these but repentant tears, 
I might forgive — forget ! 



IMPKOMPTU, 



EXTRACTED FROM A STUDENT S DIARY, 



Just twenty minutes after ten last night, 

It was — if clocks in town do all agree — 
When in my room, with fire y-blazing bright, 

I sat me down in great felicitie, 
Sans coat and vest — as men say, "easy — free;" 
And watching strange shapes in the fire appear, 
I saw the passed hour all mirrored clear. 



26 IMPROMPTU. 

A room, with crimson curtains, met my view, 
Wherein there stood a picture-covered screen, 

To stop intrusive draughts that sometimes flew 
By door-chinks in, then out by vent unseen, — 

But not unfelt by those who sat between — 
A square piano, full-toned, new and good, 
A-near the fireplace in a corner stood. 

This of the room. — 'Mongst other friends were three 
Young ladies, each and all exceeding fair — 

Aglaia, Thalia, and Euphrosyne, 

Seemed verily to move before me there : 

One with long crisped flowing golden hair, 
Another, too, with night- dark glossy tress, 
Looped on a cheek of paley loveliness. 

The third, with silken hair in lustrous braid, 
And head-dress purely classic, seemed to me, 

Like Teresa, the famed Athenian Maid, 
Or lady-love of Spanish knight, when she, 



IMPROMPTU. 27 

In moonlight, leaneth from her balcony : 

All three, so bright and witching fair, did seem 
Like fleeting phantoms of a heavenly dream. 

Then music stole among us, passing sweet, 
On which we moved, as in a mazy trance, 

The fair ones tripping it with twinkling feet, 

And, brightening all, with laughing sunny glance; 

Their visitor, constrained, essayed to dance, 
Till ten o'clock in his unwilling ear 
Proclaimed, 'Tis time thou be no longer here! 

He made to go, but ah! the door was locked — 
By angels he was prisoned for a time : 

He prayed deliverance, but they only mocked ; 
Such honied thrall can not "be said in rhyme. " 

At length, when speaking of a " downward climb, " 
The door flew open! . . But now, within the fire, 
I saw, 'mid flickering shoots, the scene expire! 



28 IMPEOMPTU. 

I rose, and shaking off the drowsy spell 

Which, though fantasque, seemed like reality; 

I heard "eleven" faint sounding from the bell, 
Slow, dirge-like, o'er the faded reverie; — 

And bathing heavy eyes to set them free, 

With longing heart-strings, and with freshened looks, 
I dived, o'er head and ears, into my books. 

1846. 



DRAMATIC- SONG. 

Alas! woes me, alas! 
So endetli many a tale : 

Ah ! why do bright dreams pass. 
And leave the true to wail, 
"With gnawing anguish pale? 
Alas ! Alas ! 

Alas! woes me, alas! 
When love unseen doth see 

The false unmasked; gold — brass: 
Truth — frail inconstancy ; 
Oh crowning misery! 
Alas ! Alas ! 



30 DRAMATIC SONG. 

Alas ! woes me, alas ! 

Blest ignorance ! now vain 
All joy that ever was; , 
Ne'er dream of love again, 

When she . . Oh! heart and brain, 
Alas! Alas! 



EMMELINE, 

I have a cousin Emmeline, 
A universal favourite she, 

With whom I wander in the woods? 
Or by the margin of the sea. 

With gentle spirit, queenly air, 
Simplicity and maiden grace, 

A potent charm — a witchery 

Dwells in the sunshine of her face. 



32 EMMELINE. 

Full well I love to muse, with her, 
By gurgling brook in leafy glade, 

Upon the beauty — harmony ' 

In every thing that God hath made. 

Oft-times we pace the rocky shore — 
The surgy murmur of the sea 

Awaking great dim shadowy thoughts, 
That image forth Eternity! 

Nor till the sunset's glowing hues 
Of mellow gold and crimson blend, 

And Vesper looks forth from the blue 
Upon the deep, we homewards wend. 

Long, there — one book upon our knee,— 
We read by moonlight as 'twere day, 

Or listen the wild iEolian Lyre's 
Sweet plaintive music die away. 



EMMEL1NE. 

Not for her beauteous face — for eyes 
Bright as the brightest orbs above, 

Or her gazelle-like step alone, 
No! 'tis her pure soul that I love. 

With violet mantle — snow-white veil, 
In tranced dreams, I see her stand, 

'Bound, harping Seraphs sprinkle flowers, 
She bears the lily in her hand ! 

But should she, meek and angel-fair, 
In passing, deign to smile on me, 

I feel as I a spirit were, 

And wake in blissful ecstacv! 



FRAGMENT. 



The joyous Sun is up! and fair young May, 
With dew-sprent coronal of buds and flowers 
Bright glistening, to green fields invites away 
Young gladsome hearts, to meet the Summer Hours. 
Deep in the flowery woods, which echoing ring 
With warblings wild, and waters murmuring ! 



PRIMROSES, 



Joy-tears stand in the flowret's eyes, 
Beaded like diamonds: All the air 
Is soft and balmy: Homeward flies 
Yon sweet-piped warbler, and whate'er 
Has life seems happy and content. 
The evening shadows, deepening, fall 
On bank — field — hedge-row : Odours blent 
Steal from the dewy grass, as all 
The flowers breathed incense. All I see 
Shall live before me; this sweet hour, 
These beauteous May-flowers, culled for me 
By friend — herself a fairer flower! 



LOVE'S HEAVEK 

Wake, dearest Alice, wake! My love, arise. 
Hark! early birds do call us: colours bright 

Along the orient burn ; float, 'neath blue skies, 
Orange and roseate streaks, in amber light! 

Lady, thus broke the sunlight of thy love 

On my night-pilgrimage; and when thine eyes 

Meet thus my tranced gaze, in them, above 
Time and times' things, I search for destinies. 

Ere I had known thee, thou wert shadow'd forth 

Angelical — a joy — hope's brightest gleam- 
Music like air around thee : Known — thy worth 
Excelleth all I fancied in my dream. 



DRAMATIC SOXG. 

(Mad lady sings.) 
I. 

He is gone ! He is gone ! 
And will he not return? 
Oil, corne, sweet Death, 
For thou like me art lone ! 
Heart-fires burn; brain-fires burn; 
Oh ! for thy icy breath, 
Thy cool delicious breath, 

Sweet death ! 
And I will cull thee now, 
Eosebuds white and red, 
And a bridal wreath shall grace thy brow; 
These, thoiv shalt wear, instead of me, 
That all may smile on thee 
When I am dead! 



38 DRAMATIC SONG. 

He is here ! He is here ! 
Woe-haunting shape, depart, — ■ 

Oh ! bring the bier, 
And carry forth a heart, 
Though dead to me, yet dear. 
Oh! for thy icy breath, 
Thy cool delicious breath, 

Sweet death ! 
And I will cull thee now ? 
Eosebuds white and red, 
And a bridal wreath shall grace thy brow; 
These, thou shalt wear, instead of me, 
That all may smile on thee 
When I am dead ! 



TO UNDINE. 



[written on the fly-leaf of A COPY OF the baron de la 

310TTE FOUQL'E'S BEAUTIFUL MINIATURE ROMANCE.] 



Undine! lovely sprite — ■ 

Thou vision of delight! 
More pure and wondrous fair 
Than the lilies in thy hair: 
Thy graceful sylph-like form, more bright 

Than yonder stars on high, 

Mildly lambent in the sky, 
Yet gleaming vari- coloured light, 
Far through the azure depths of night ! 



40 . TO UNDINE. 

Hie thee to one who wears 

On her left hand a mystic ring*, 
With a golden-heart; and sweetly sing 
To her, of thy cool green ocean home, 

Sparry cave, and crystal dome; 

Of Islands, fountains, rivers, meres, 

Golden sands, and bright sea-flowers; 

Of glistening shells, and coral bowers, 
Now gleaming forth brightly, now glimmering pale 
Through the water's clear tremulous silvery veil: 
Birth, Life, and Death, one wonderful whole, 
Mysterious union of body and soul. 

Lovely Undine! sweetly sing 

To her, as oft thou singest to me, 

In the murmur of the sea, 

Dissolving all my rising fears 
In delicious tears! 



{ 

SONG, 

WRITTEN FOR AX AIR BY BELLINI, 
COMMONLY SUNG TO THE WORDS, "I'LL WEEP FOR THEE. EVER.' 

Adieu ! to thee, clearest I 

Though I roam hieath sunny skies, 
Or climb the snowy Alpine peak, — 

The memory of thine eyes, 
With their spirit light, shall follow 

Me over land and sea, 
And, with sweet starry influence, 

Ave lead me back to thee ! 



LINES, 



[on having a cape, lent to a lady, returned— the pockets 
sewed up and filled with flowers :— written in compli- 
ANCE WITH THE REQUEST FOR A CONTRIBUTION TO HER ALBUM ] 



Lady, ye would have me write — 
And when the fair command, 

What is left a luckless wight 
But take his pen in hand? 

Though his thoughts be gathering wool, 

And brains be dry as dust; 
Humbly owning Queenly rule, 

Write something, sure he must ! 



LINES. 



Thanks, then, lady! In this shape 

Must these lame verses run, 
For returning my light cape, 
Sweet as from Gulistan. 

Carefully, the pockets five, 

Sewed up and filled with flowers ! 

(Flora and the Graces strive 
With all their witching powers.) 

Troth! it was a dainty thought! 

So in the dew or rain, 
Proud to shelter thee from aught, 

Ye'll have the cape again! 



TO ALICE. 



u A young lamb's heart amidst the full-grown flocks." 

— AYOEDSWOETH. 

Yes, thou hast brought thy childhood with, thee, Love! 

Hast drunk the fountain of eternal youth, 

And never shalt grow older, dearest friend. 

Like consecrated maiden, meek and fair, 

Unconscious of the homage of all hearts, 

Thou movest in a charmed atmosphere 

Of orient light, diffusing joy around thee! 

The mellowed wisdom which experience yields, 
Dove-like simplicity, and innocence, 



TO ALICE. 45 

Truth, high-souled honour — all that's womanly. 
Are thine; making thee ever feel and act 
Intuitively right. Yes. dearest friend, 
I bless thee for thy love — a lore for which 
I VI hew through paynim hordes — dare all hard-things. 
If need were; this thou know'st — Ah! what are words? 
Joy-tears now in mine eyes, I pray that He. 
The meek and lowly — called, Himself, a Lamb— < 
May ever shield and bless thee ! 



THE VOICE OP THE SEA. 



Myriad-twinkling, restless sea, 
In the sunshine, gloriously 
Shimmering with flashing light, 
Living, sparkling, diamond-bright; 
From the ripple on the beach, 

Far as dazzled eye can reach — 
To Arran, Pladda, Ailsa blue, 
Where the horizon bounds the view ! 



UN. V0K E OF i HE SEA. 
II. 

Though now playful as a child, 
Oft I've woo'd thee, dark and wild — * 
Joyed to hear thy billows roar, 
Thundering grandly on the shore. 
Hushed in slumber, mirror-calm— 
Now the lion, now the lamb — ■ 
Every mood I love in thee, 
Ever changing, changeless sea! 

in. 
For thy voice, so vague and vast, 
Whispers of the buried Past — 
Or of shadowy Future years, 
Fraught with yearning hopes and fears '. 
Soul-tides linked to sun, moon, star, 
Truths of deeper import far, 
Shining, where Faith's golden key 
Unlocks Nature's Mystery! 



SONG OF LIFE. 



Ah! Lady fair, 
Grief, cark, and care 
Soon blanch the hair: 

But sorrow brings 
Sweet visitings — 
Yea, heavenly things 

Will Gocl reveal 
To those who feel 
His hand, and kneel. 



SONG OF LIFE. 49 

Though, veiled in tears, 
Thy former years, 
Lo! now appears, 

In glory dight, 
Hope's arch of light, 
The rainbow "bright — 

Peace from above, 

And noblest love, 

Be thine, sweet dove ! 



SONG 

FOB, MUSIC. 

Oh! for golden Sleep — 
Golden no more to me ; 

Leaden night-mares creep 
Heavily o'er me, 

Lady! 

Oil ! for golden Light 
In some leafy bower: 

Would that it were night — 
Slowly wears the hour, 
Lady! 



SONG. 51 



Oh! for golden Song! 

Harsh each warbled note 
Jarreth now ! My wrong 

Ne'er can be forgot, 

Lady! 



,-;-- 




THE DBEAM HAEP. 



-o — 



Methought I was alone, and feelings strange 
Of utter dreariness weighed on my spirit. 
The stars were sparkling clear, but they on me 



THE DREAM HARP. i)c 

Shed no sweet influence. Nature's secrets all 
Were locked from me, and sealed as with sev'n seals, 
Nor inner light was there whereby to read 
Her mysteries. I sadly wandered on 
In silence, questioning the universe, 
And my own soul : impenetrable clouds, 
Heavy and dark, seemed resting upon both, 
Which even the stars — the beauteous friendly stars, 
Now quivering in the brook which crossed my path- 
Could no -wise dissipate, 

Now, dreamy sounds, 
As from iEolian harp, faint, sweet, and low, 
From the far distance, trembled into being, 
Aye waxing nearer, clearer, in the air, 
Swelling in dulcet, breezy, murmuring chords. 

Angels, descending, bore with them a Harp — 
The waving of their pinions pulsing waves 
Of sound, in ripples through the summer air — 
And to my tranced ear, its heavenly tones 



54 THE DREAM HARP. 

Were tones of peace. The nearing harp itself 

Was of rare beauty — the device was this : — 

On either side an alabaster Cross 

Of snowy whiteness, twined with dew-sprent flowers, 

Eoses of Sharon — Lilies of the vale; 

Above, a Eainbow spanned from cross to cross, 

From whose seven colours, seven golden chords 

Stretched downwards to a Circle embleming 

Eternity — each chord from its own colour; 

And, through the circle, in the azure sky, 

A white Dove, with an olive branch, was seen 

Descending. Through the golden chords there shone, 

As if through furnace bars, a dull blood-red 

Apocalyptic Sun, shorn of its rays. 

Above the Eainbow, in the deep serene — 

As 'twere the key-note of the whole device — 

The Morning-star shed lambent peaceful light. 

The dream I felt to be symbolical 
Of the great universal harmonies, 



THE DREAM HARP. 55 

(For in the music these expressed themselves) 
All centring in pure Christianity; 
And of that time, when Love's great tidal wave 
Shall sweep the world, and bring its Sabbath rest. 

Melodious strains of penetrating sweetness 
Now waxed louder, richer, till o'er-powered, 
Dissolving in luxurious pain, delight 
Ineffable, I should have died, had they 
Not then, all but insensibly, become 
Softer and fainter — Angels and the Harp 
In distance dimming gradually away; 
Its tones all fading in etherial beauty, 
Till lost in dreamy moriendos. 

Eapt, 
I there stood gazing upward, after it 
Had long ceased to be heard: The heavy cloud 
Was lifted from my spirit; all shone clear, 
For, through the chords and colours Seven, had streamed 
Into my tranced soul, One ray of Light 



56 THE DREAM HARP. 

From the Seventh Heavens : and therein, vibrate still 

The echoes of that heavenly harmony, 

Even though the dream has long since passed away! 



LIFE'S DREAM. 



Yes — 'twas in yon black gondola! 

Thon and I sat dreaming there. 
Pale and silent, one in spirit. 

Sailing seas of dark despair. 

Oar to steer, or song to cheer us, 
There was none, yet on we sped, 

Throngh great brackish waves of sorrow 
Dashing, as the wild winds led : 



58 life's dream. 

As the wild winds? — Hush! the tempest 
But obeys His sovereign will 

Who, 'mid seeming shoreless anguish, * 
Cometh saying, " Peace be still !•" 

Down the sun sank, red and stormy, 
Glaring through the spoon-drift white : 

Orange streaks and fiery scarlet, 
Fading, barred the ebbing light. 

Darkness veiled the heaving ocean — 
Hope and joy lost in eclipse — 

Well nigh foundered, trembling, weary, 
Words of prayer 'scaped thy lips ! 

Then, the East began to brighten, 
And the tempest died away ; 

Hesper mild looked from the azure — 
Joy dawned with the break of day ! 



life's dream. 59 

Odours rich, came stealing, wafted 

Far, from dim-seen Islands Blest . . . 

Noon ! — the prow had touched the sand-beach — 
Spirits twain enjoy their rest ! 



ASPIRATION AND DUTY. 



Oh! what is earth to those who long 
For higher, holier, nobler things? 

I'd soar aloft, on burning song, 
Amid the rush of spirit- wings! 

But hush, fond heart! while here below, 
At duty's call, fulfil thy fate; 

And humbly, onward — upward go, 
So shalt thou enter Heaven's gate ! 



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